Psalm 76:6
At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, both the chariot and horse are cast into a dead sleep.
Cross-references
In Psalm 104:7, waters flee at God's rebuke, using the same phrase to show creation's response to divine power.
In Psalm 80:16, enemies perish at God's rebuke, reinforcing the effect of divine rebuke in stunning enemies.
In Psalm 18:15, the same phrase 'at your rebuke' describes God's power over the sea, paralleling the stunning of horse and rider.
In Zechariah 12:4, God strikes horses with panic and blindness — similar to the stunned stillness of horses here.
In Jeremiah 51:57, God makes Babylon's warriors drunk to sleep forever — same imagery as the stilled horses and chariots here.
In Jeremiah 51:39, God makes Babylon's leaders drunk to sleep forever — a parallel to the perpetual sleep of horses and chariots here.
Exodus 15:21 repeats the song's refrain 'horse and driver hurled into the sea', directly echoing the same divine victory.
Exodus 15:4-6 expands on the defeat of Pharaoh's chariots and army, reinforcing the theme of God's power over horse and rider.
Exodus 15:1 uses the identical 'horse and rider' imagery to celebrate God hurling them into the sea.
Exodus 14:28 specifies that the waters covered the chariots and horsemen, the very scene Psalm 76:6 alludes to.
Isaiah 43:17 echoes the same image of God causing chariots and horses to lie still, reinforcing God's power over military might.
Haggai 2:22 directly parallels with 'overthrow chariots and riders; horses will fall,' echoing God's power over military forces.
In Exodus 14:25, God clogs Egyptian chariot wheels — a historical instance of God disabling chariots, as described poetically here.
Exodus 14:27 describes the Red Sea returning and sweeping the Egyptians away, the event behind the 'stunned horse and rider' imagery.
Exodus 15:10 describes the enemy sinking like lead, a different image but the same Red Sea victory as Psalm 76:6.
Jeremiah 50:37 describes judgment on Babylon's horses and chariots, similar to God's rebuke in Psalm 76:6, though with sword imagery.
Jeremiah 51:21 uses 'shatter horse and rider' as God's instrument, paralleling the theme of divine power over chariots.